Erosion and the limits to planetesimal growth
Sebastiaan Krijt, Chris W. Ormel, Carsten Dominik, Alexander G.G.M., Tielens

TL;DR
This paper investigates how erosive collisions affect the growth of icy dust aggregates into planetesimals, finding that erosion can prevent growth crossing the radial drift barrier unless aggregates are very resilient.
Contribution
It introduces a Monte Carlo model to study the impact of erosive collisions on porous ice aggregate growth, highlighting erosion's role in limiting planetesimal formation.
Findings
Erosive collisions prevent growth at moderate erosion thresholds.
High erosion thresholds allow aggregates to cross the radial drift barrier.
Erosion influences the size distribution of dust particles in protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
The coagulation of microscopic dust into planetesimals is the first step towards planet formation. The size and shape of the growing aggregates determine the efficiency of this early growth. It has been proposed that fluffy ice aggregates can grow very efficiently, suffering less from the bouncing and radial drift barriers. While the collision velocity between icy aggregates of similar size is thought to stay below the fragmentation threshold, they may nonetheless lose mass from collisions with much smaller projectiles. We investigate the effect of these erosive collisions on the ability of porous ice aggregates to cross the radial drift barrier. We develop a Monte Carlo code that calculates the evolution of the growing aggregates, while resolving the entire mass distribution at all times. The aggregate's porosity is treated independently of its mass, and is determined by collisions,…
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